The Weather
U. 8. Weather Bureae Forecast
Windy tonight, cooler Tuesday
(Details on Page 2)
——
THE PONTIAC PRE
117th YEAR kKkekaexkx PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 195934 PAGES UNIT.
OVER PAGES.
.
resident Studie
Protest Ordering
U.S. Official
From Moscow Boy Suffocates,
Nine in Hospital
cntony Seonty wn rom Stove Gas Leaves Russia Amid GREENVILLE (#—Doctors watched’ the condition
Charges of Espionage | today of hospitalized survivors of a gas-fumes home
tragedy in which a small boy. died.
Apparently, only a last-minute telephone call for
help from one member of a stricken family warded off
more deaths.
The boy, 4-year-old Randy Chansler of Royal Oak,
and nine other persons were overcome by carbon mon-
oxide fumes from a clogged*
Randy great grandmotner Duyccia Ranorts
on Moon Photos MOSCOW (UPI) — Rus-| yesterday.
sell Langelle, American em-| Periled by the gas were three
: other children and six adults. All|
bassy security officer or- nine were taken to United Memor-|
Tass Says Ist Pictures |
| to Be Published; Lunik|
| Making 2nd Swing |
MOSCOW (® — Soviet
sources said today Russian
authorities caught U.
embassy attache Russell
Langelie paying a Soviet
citizen 20,000 rubles
($5,000 at the official rate)
for secret intelligence in-
formation.
dered out of Russia by the ial Hospital.
Soviet government despite| Hospital authorities reported |
a U.S. protest left Moscow) the six adults and three children
at 6:15 p.m. (11:15 a.m. in fair condition following over-
| night treatment,
EDT) today for Amsterdam| "*
with his wife and three chil- |masonry contractor. was found!
dren. }dead in the home. All the others|
A crowd of 50 American were unconscious.
well-wishers turned up to} a
see them off. | Randy, son of Sam Chansler, a|
MOSCOW (P®—Lunik III raced|
away from the earth again today|
after reportedly sending the earth
the first pictures ever taken of the!
The famiiy group had gathered hidden side of the wee
for a weekend reunion at the home} Langelle, according to State De- 05 wirs Annie Hansen. 83 The Soviet News Agency Tass
partment assertions, was seized Dr. John Gl — d ‘ \said the photographs are being i eg > —
by civilian-clothed men last Thurs-| UT: Yom Glerum, responding 10 processed and will be published
day. They accused him of being 4 call to, the hospital found the
a spy, threatened him with im- 8OUP Unconscious.
prisonment and physical violence,; The call for help reportedly
| was made by Clady Hansen, 55,
| daughter of Mrs. Hansen. giving mankind the first view cf
the far side of the moon never seen
from the earth.
| Scientists expect the pictures (to
| show the same sort of cratered
face as the side of the moon
which the earth sees Police Sgt. Hugh Corey said a
neighborhood girl previously had
| failed to respond to the breaking}
lof a window in the home and a taken Oct. 6—two days after the
;among those in critical condition. | jt hurtled out into space.
* * * | * * *
Also overcome were Chansler! Moscow Radio said the Soviet
jand his wife, Betty, 34 their three |space vehicle completed its first|
jOther children, Jerry, 12, Billy. 8,'circuit around the earth Sunday
and Cathy, 9, and the younger Mrs.'and continued on its vast orbit,|
|Hansen and Hugh Brandford, 62, cf running 17 minutes behind pre-
|Bear Lake, father of Mrs. Chans- yjously announced schedule.
jcall of “Help help, before we jaunching of the 614-pound flying «
| suffocate jobservatory — when it swooped
The elder Mrs. Hansen was)within 4,375 miles of the moon as A SOBER MEETING — To
ment in the steel strike
George Taylor,
reported to Eisenhower on the fz met onc
chairman of the
er is expected to invoke the
| ~
The pictures presumably were Two Tots Die
in Home Fire Father and Child, 5,
Wayne County Hospital,
Mother Sounds Alarm
GARDEN CITY Taft-Hartley x * *
p men trying to negotiate a settle-
‘e again on Sunday in Washington
President's fact-finding panel, has
ailure of any settlement
Act for Eisenhow
a cooling off ve gd toda Fre left a
r the St Aorket Dav \1
il 4 | \ AP Wirephote
Bloomtield Twp. 15-Year-Old
Is Shot in Stolen Car Chase :
West Bloomficl
Township youth in a stolen ¢
was shot and critically wounded bh lwear-old
police early today in a wild cha»
through Birmingham at speeds up
(®— Two smallito 100 miles an hour,
ller, and his wife, Louella. wile, Louella. 36. ; childrén perished today when : s The next radio contact with | flames swept through their frame James P. oO Leary was in criti
the traveler — officially called | home jn this Detroit suburb cal condition in William Beau-
an automatic interplanetary sta- | * * * mont Hospital in Royal Oak. He
ews as es | tion—is fixed for Wednesday ait- Carol Ann Geboy, 1, and her “8S shot in the hack of the neck,
ernoon, when it is scheduled to brother Gregory, 3, died as they the bullet piercing his spinal
| be 242,335 miles from the earth. slept in their bedroom. column,
DETROIT Ww — Fritz Crisler . or t ' kl will announce later this week, | The Soviets have been cagey The children’s father Carl, 29, A former inmate of the Oaklane
RUSSELL LANGELLE probably Friday, that he is jabout the equipment packed into’ and another child, Steven, 5, Counts Children’s Center O'Leary
accepting the job of commission. |the space traveler were hospitalized with burns. Au. Of 2983 DePew St. had stolen
hreatened his family and offered| *® of the new American football | There was no official mention of thorities at Wayne County Gen- sports car about 3 a m. today
threatens same and ore’ league, a reliable source report- camera apparatus. eral Hospital said they expected Birmingham police said. It ts him money to spy on his own! ague, so port- . _ them te recever
country, | ed today. ;
It Was 103 on West Coast A U.S. protest note called his y SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI) men she fell asleep while watch
ee —— of | —Gov. Edmund G. Brown toe- NEW YORK (UPI)—The high- | ing television and awoke about 2:30
P fi day refused to save the life of | est temperature in the nation a.m. to find the house in flames
Russia rejected the US. note, Caryl Chessman, a kidnaper- yesterday was registered at She said she fled through a doo
about the case Saturday. The re-| rapist and best-selling author | Yuma, Ariz, and Imperial, | and summoned neighbors.
jection was the reason for their) who faces execution next Fri- | Calif. where the mercury rose ; _ +e 8
swift departure. It in effect gave! day. | to 103 degrees, the U. S. Weather | Geboy and the children wert
Langelle three days to get out of anal Bureau reported. The low this |“!CePing in first-floor bedrooms at
the country DETROIT — Seven-footer | morning was 11 degrees at ie back of the bouse * * * Walter Dukes quit the Detroit | Fraser, Colo. At the South Pole | Cause of the blaze was not de
Edward Freers Jr. the US
charge d'affaires in Moscow, told;
reporters he had called on Sergei Pistons today. | Saturday the temperature ranged
The big veteran missed the | from minus 59 degrees to minus
club's opehing basketball game | 31.
| in Minneapolis yesterday after a | —
MOSCOW (® — Robert Edward | contract disagreement with Gen-
| = ~~ Charlotte Calms Down —— — — OOOO —_-———_——_——_-
| The mother, Rose, 28, told fire
termined
WASHINGTON (UPI}—Sen John The major product of at St .
aturn at
of Oakland County is what might be ljonged to Paul WK m> Cha
in the Sylvan SNopping
V e )
rt This is five blo 4 €
home of the bov's parents,
* * *
Birmingham patrolmen
ind Millar
about XY a.m said that
Otted 1
ided Propst d Squire
they
> The wives attending are his wid-
In charge of arrangements for ow and Mrs, Nora Eddington
the day-long event is Mrs. Floyd |Flynn Haymes, his second wife.
Smith, chairman of the Civic et |
ing-Planning Committee of
Greater Pontiac Community eel
cil. Coordinator is Dr. Lowell R.
Elklund, director of continuing edu.
cation at MSUO.
Hunting Dog Doesn't
Know When to Quif
; e cani re good en-
Holland Helps | ints. "tittog gt enc Plaut a Garden are failures,
. . Oakland County sheriff's depu-
in United States
STERLING FOREST, N. Y.! ties had a story this weekend
‘UPT) — An unusual experiment in about a dog who was both,
international cooperation is turning * * *
“Brownie,” an eight-year-old
125 acres of Ramapo Mountain
woodland and meadow here into
Beagle, went for a “run” with
her master, Clare Kaiser, 1555
Rochester Rd., Addison Town-
ship, near the Kaiser home Sun-
gardens, x *« *
The famous Keukenhof gardens
of tulips, daffodils and hyacinths
in Holland inspired the planning
of Sterling Forest Gardens. So the |Clemons Thursday night for a
|County Chairman Arthur G. El-
is expected to brief the
national chairman on re-organiza-
tion plans keyed to next year’s
state and county elec-
Attending the gathering with El- ~——-
liott will be five district chairmen
vce? Traffic Toll Si. will come to Michigan)
Wednesday afternoon from Fargo, |
_ He'll go to Grand Rapids}
arriving in Oakland County 0 q §
Grave Today _thea photographed and printed.
He’ll Learn Fate Today
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI)
— Convict-author Caryl Chess-
man today expects a _life or
Farm Accidents Kill 2,
Duck Hunter Drowns,
2 Die in Other Mishaps
By United Press International
Michigan traffic death toll
‘dipped to six during the weekend |
but five other persons lost their |
lives in miscellaneous accidents.
* *x x
Two of the miscellaneous deaths |
occurred in farm accidents, an-)
‘other was a drowning, one resulted] and Bloomfield from a fire and the other was due!
Ito apparent carbon monoxide poi-
soning.
* * *
Emil Stoike, 62, of rural Allegan
and Herman Rief Jr., 32, Blumfield | —
Township, Saginaw County, died in
the farm accidents. Stoike suffered
fatal head injuries Sunday when he
fell from the top of a corn crib
jand Rief was killed Saturday night
when he fell from a trailer.
Millard N, Wise, 54, Sault Ste.
Marie, drowned in Brimley Bay
20 miles west of his home Sunday |
when a boat capsized while he |
was duck hunting. ¢
Luther J. Ruffin, 36, Detroit, suf-
focated at the home of a mend
during a fire Sunday.
Four-year-old Randy Chansler of
Royal Oak died and eight other!
persons were overcome by appar- |
rent carbon monoxide fumes at!
the home of relatives in Greenville. |
* * x
Traffic victims included: Mrs, Albina Wysocki, 68, Alpena
—Struck by a car and killed while
crossing a street Friday night.
Alfred G. Peters, 22, Romeo—
Killed Saturday when his car left
a road in Macomb County and
‘struck a tree. |
Etta Grappian, 75, Clio—Died |
|Saturday of injuries suffered earli- |
jer in the day in a two-car crash
\in Genesee County. |
| Isaac Korpi, Dearborn — Struck
by a car and killed Sunday while
crossing a Dearborn street, |
“President Studying
‘Sad’ Steel Report | (Continued From Page One)
|reached the end of the mediation,
| road “with very sad hearts, be-/ }
jcause we feel = is an- extremely | :
|critical situation.’
“The parties have a continuing |
obligation to resolve these issues,”’
Taylor said, after observing that
the board feels the differences can
be resolved. }
“This obligation to the coun- |
try will not be discharged until
they can sign an agreement,
which is their duty in a democ-
racy such as ours to avoid the |
sion.
"It is the belief of the board;
that if we ever come to that (im- |
posed decisions in labor disputes),
we won't have the same kind of
country.” .
Taylor was referring to recent)
proposals for stronger government |
action to settle major disputes
through compulsory arbitration
and other actions demanded in the
sponsors of the project decided to last few days by some members of
Congress.
ask the Dutch to collaborate on |
it.
Dutch bulb experts were invited
here more than a year ago to select
the best site for the gardens, and
tects were asked to plan the area.
* * *
They are working in cooperation
with AmericanJandscape architects
and horticulturists, shaping up the
new gardens for their formal open-
ing next spring.
The. cooperation of the Dutch
is not stopping with the Inyout of
the gardens.
Some 1,500,000 hyacinths, daffo-
coest port. Seven members of the
| crew were rescued hours later,
| but four others were still miss- iteam of top plantérs from Holland
| ing late Sunday. dils and tulips have been planted in
|Sterling Forest Gardens with a
|supervising the operation.
|
As Advertised on TV—New at SIMMS 9
Magic Tracer 7 DRAWING OUTFIT ‘constructed in 1850.
possibility of an imposed deci- | Chessman Decision Due
death decision from Gov. Ed-
mund G. Brown.
The governor promised he
would announce whether he will
grant executive clemency to the
38-year-old kidnap-rapist or let
him die as scheduled next Fri-
day in the lethal gas chamber
at San Quentin prisog.
Chessman opposed the clem-
ency hearing, claiming he
wanted either vindication or
death.
Brown, a Catholic, a lawyer,
one-time district attorney and an
| Opponent of capital punishment,
is sworn to uphold the California
law on the death penalty. He
held a clemency hearing for
Chessman last week.
* x *
Brown said then he would do
one of two things — refuse to in-
tervene in the scheduled execu-
tion or commute Chessman's
sentence to life in prison without
parole.
Started Puffing in 1850
First railroad in Illinois was
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eo & @ Bee @ Ss @ ae Sete GOP Hopes
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. OCTOBER 19, 1959
Dinners
Will Raise $6 Million
English Ruler Danish
Canute, ruler of England from
1017 to 1035, was a Dane. r=.
L. H. Cole Oil
OVER 35 YEARS of DEPENDABLE SERVICE FULLY AUTOMATIC DELIVERIES
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called Sunday for such a move
UPI Phete
CULTIVATING A TASTE — Learning to distinguish drugs and
medicines by taste alone, midwife Amna Bint Abdel Hafiz wears
a blindfold in a test of he: skill at a health center in the village of
Hosh, Sudan. Unable to read or write, she learns to identify the
medicines in this unusual fashion. In a country with only one doc-
tor for every 72,000 people, midwives serve as an important link
between hospitals and the outlying areas of the nation. The mid-
| wives are trained in modern medical techniques at the nine ma-
ternal and child welfare centers set up by the government with
| the assistance of the United Nations Children’s Fund.
| WASHINGTON (AP)—The Statement here about what the Soviet
| Department is reported to be con-;Move itself was supposed to ac-
\sidering ejecting a Soviet diplo- | COMPlish.
jmat from the United States in wt theory advanced*in diplo-
‘taliation for the Soviet Union's matic quarters is that the Krem-
jouster of the security chief of the|lin wanted to warn the Soviet peo-
'U. S. Embassy at Moscow, ‘ple to be wary of friendly con-
x * * jtacts with Americans in spite of
| The prospect that such a step {the official policy of the ‘‘Spirit
will actually be taken is at the|0f Camp David" preached by Pre- ‘moment highly uncertain, Sen. |™Mier Nikita «Khrushchev following
John Sherman Cooper (R + Ky) |his conference with President Ei-
| senhower three weeks ago.
* * * * * *
One
“in the absence of an apology”
from the Kremlin. But this is only a theory and | * * * officials here are waiting to see
The uncertainty is due partly to how the Soviets themselves han-
ithe fact that some officials con-|dle the case of 37-year-old Russell
jsider direct retaliation in such/A. Langelle before they make up
cases as an empty gesture. But it|their minds what the maneuver
is also the result of great puzzle-|may mean.
RAILROAD FEATHERBEDDING:
“900,000,000 LOSS TO THE NATION—INCLU DING YOU—EVERY YEAR
Featherbedding on the railroads — pay for work
not done or not needed — is costing the Amer-
ican people the shocking total of more than
$500,000,000 a year.
You pay for it every time you shop, because
featherbedding costs are hidden in the price of
everything you buy.
Obsolete union work rules, involving the rail-
road operating employees, are responsible for this
gigantic burden. Right now, for instance, these
rules require every diesel locomotive to carry a
fireman —even though diesels have no fires to
stoke, no boilers to tend.
The forthcoming negotiations between the rail-
toads and the unions are urgently important to
the whole nation.
In asking the unions to drop these featherbedding
rules, all the railroads
work for a fair day’s
AMERICAN ask for is a fair day's
pay.
RAILROADS Storm Lets
Florida
Oft Easy
MIAMI, Fla, (AP). — Tropical
storm Judith raced east northeast-
ward in the open Atlantic Ocean
today after leaving Florida wet
but practically unscathed.
The storm, which developed un-
expectedly in the Gulf of Mexico
Saturday, created about its only
excitement before it hit—when it
was described for a few hours as
a small hurricane. There was
hardly any excitement during its
passage.
x* * *
This morning, Judith was about!
550 miles east of Daytona Beach,
Fla., moving at 35 miles an hour
with highest winds estimated at
60 to 70 miles an hour.
Judith became disorganized into
a huge patch of squalls as it hit
Florida and knifed across the
southern end of the peninsula. It
moved inland on the Gulf Coast
near Fort Myers and then across
ithe sparsely settled lake Okeecho-
bee section before reaching the At- |
jlantic in the vicinity of Fort!
| Pierce.
x * *
Highest winds on its passage|
were 55 miles an hour. Torrential |
rains fell in some areas, and the
Weather Bureau said water dam-
age probably would equal that
| caused by the winds. |
Start Idlewild Chapel |
| NEW YORK (AP) — Religious
leaders dedicated ground Sunday |
lat Idlewild Airport on which a|
'$250,000 Protestant international
|chapel will be built, The chapel,
|to be built in 1961, will occupy a
|site near a Roman Catholic chap-
el now in use and a Jewish place
of worship started last June.
Lont o’ Dancin’ Goin’ On
Prima Theatrical Footwear, Inc.,;
}of Columbus, Ohio, turns out more
{than 4,000 pairs of dancing shoes
| and slippers a day. jneed clothes, All I need is a
home.”
* * *
The children, ranging in age
| August. At that time she declined Station Wagon
Home for Nine j
Ontario Is Large Students Ples
cranes cen ghar Wl tario extends more than 1,000 miles r eeks,
on its north-south axis, from polar EDWARD Tomes age |
regions to its border on the south, 18 S. Saginaw
Widow to Get Mental
Checkup, Children Are
Getting Foster Care
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP)—The St.
Louis Board of Childrens’ Guardi-
ans is considering the case of a RAMMLER- DALLAS COME IN AND SEE THE NEW DODGE!
Dodge, Simca, Chrysler, Imperial, Dodge Truck
1001 MAIN ST. ROCHESTER OL 2-9411| 3-year-old widow and her eight
children, found living in a station
wagon here for the second time
since her husband died last July.
* * *
Mrs, William H. Catlow was
found in the car Saturday. Police
said she had $2,800 in cash. Weep-
ing, she told police:
“I don’t need food and I don't
from 4 months to 11 years, were
in good condition. They were
placed in foster homes and their
mother was admitted to a mental
hospital for observation.
* * *
Mrs. Catlow and her family
were found living in the car last
the help of sérvice agencies, and
left for California. She receives
$250 a month from Social Secu-
rity. * * * |
Police said she and the family |
had been living in the station
wagon since returning from Po-
mona, Calif. recently.
It’s Not Only Money
Working Wives Want |
ITHACA, N.Y. (UPI)—Women|
who hold down jobs outside the|
home consider the social contacts|
they make as a result of them|
almost as important as the extra|
income, a study indicates.
Details of the study were re
vealed during a farm meeting here
by Dr. Francena L. Nolan, sociolo-
a a wt a ek |
|
|
|
|
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conference on distribution TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 19359
|
i
}
a «=6Newaygo County was named vice |Dibelius, 79-year-old West Berlin
Sheriff Elton Sampson |churchman and head of the Ger-
iof Montcalm County was named |man Evangelical Church, says he
to a board position which Barnes 'does not feel obliged to obey East
|\German traffic rules because he
free on $250 bond for ‘considers them illegal and made
cial events designed to bring business to the trial in _November, was charged | in ‘disregard of God.” * |
: os
AP Wirephete
THEY ARE PROTECTED — These children The cc ontest is part of a series of spe- |
are drawing pictures on the pavement of a roped-
off downtown intersection in Des Moines, Ic
much in the same way they would on thy side-
walks in front of their homes. But this time it's for prizes
area of Des Moines.
closed off,
temporarily. downtown
traffic
become wa, Two primary |
arte and they have |
a mall nes were
Reds Get Into the Picture
Economic Rivalry in Europe Is Bad
BOSTON (UPI) — The United and living standards in Italy, must. take the initiative and
States must join two bickering France. West Germany. Holland. “strengthen the mechanism for ne-|
economic SEVeMNEIaCRY “ERAS AN Belgium and Luxemburg The six 8otation,” said Neal.
Europe uf Ht 3s to prevent ani notions have. said Neal. “started * ® outright split and a victory for the
Communist world an economist °" the road toward eliminating all’ «The discmmination exercised by
warned today restnicuions on the movement of the common market against all out-
~ * a persons, goods, and capital among giders could be reduced as its com-
Alfred C. Neal, president of the themselves mon tariff is reduced,’’ he said
committee for- economic develop- -_ *e& * “Our good intentions would be
ment, said a brewing split between However, he said England, Aus- demonstrated if we were to join
Europe's common market and the tria, Switzerland, Portugal and the organization for European eco-
“outer seven’ threatens the West. the three Scandanavian nations — nomic cooperation and help to con#
“We should realize that the split not included in the common mar- Vert it into am organization for
in Europe is dangerous from the ket and facing ‘‘a growing discrim- Atlantic economic cooperation
standpoint of our economic com- ination against their products’ — which would deal with all of the
petition with the Communist formed a little free trade area Major economic problems of com-
world.’’ Neal said in a spreeh pre- called the “‘outer seven.’ mon concern to the Western
W orld.” pared for the 31st annua! Boston “There is no question that
there is a possibility of a split |
developing in Europe between
these two groups,"' said Neal.
In this situation it is the United
Stop Heart Gas 3 Times Faster States which, I believe, can have |
Certified taboratory tests prove BELL-ANS tab- we now need Europe's aid in the
further task which lies before us . decisive influence.”’ : cae 9 aa aa
~ in one minute as many leading digestive tablets. -elop under- >|.
of dev ing the rdevel- | since many common market pro- get BELL-ANS today for the fastest bnows (Advetrisement)
“We roust realize too that just be )
as Europe needed our aid in the G@ Ss Ss y s
period of its own reconstruction,
s oestl??
. . ponents feel the ‘outer seven”’ was relief, 35¢@ at Greupists Fag Lens =
~ ANS, angeburg. ' ree
_ The common market in Europe formed merely to offset the com vag . .
was set up to raise production mon market, the United States
FUEL OIL No Contract Cited by Safety Council
CHICAGO (UPI) — Four Mich
igan organizations have been cited Four Teen Negroes
on Trial for Rape
by the National Safety Council for
outstanding traffic safety activities Necessar y
NEW YORK (AP) — Four Ne- in 1958 Call Today gro teen-agers are scheduled to g0 They were the Cpl. Neil W. Reid on trial in Queens County Court poct of the VFW at Roseville, the
today charged with raping a 14 Flint Exchange Club, the Michigan year-old white girl Trucking Assn., and the Pure-Pak
The girl. whose name has been Division of Ex-Cell-O Corp., De-
withheld, allegedly was raped last ¢roit.
June 18 at a Queens junior high
school where she is eighth-
grade student. An _ Adolescent
Court judge decided that the boys
should be tried as adults
* * *
The four—Edward Jacobs. 17
and Henry Stokes, Jacob Bethea
and John Rich, all 16—could be
sentenced to 20 years in prison if
convicted. New York has no death
penalty for rape Gregory Oil Co. Phone FE 5-6141
94 East Walton Bivd.
in
e
The girl testified in Adolescent Brothers Z { -Z G
Court that she had promised _ in-
timacies to one of the bovs but
had no intention of goimr
with it. through
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Sheriff Head
Barnes Resigns
is under a charge of drunk driving
\to
| of Saginaw County was elected
| Barnes’
| ciation board of directors. Kack-
| meister had been vice presi-
|president. Still Denies Charge of
Drunk Driving; State:
Officers Reshuffled
LANSING “#® — The Michigan
Sheriffs Assn. has a new lineup | lof top officers in the wake ot| Turkish Gunrunners
|Sheriff Willard P. Barnes’ resigna-|
‘tion as president.
* * *
The Ingham County sheriff, who
which he has stood mute,
turned in his resignation over the
weekend.
Sheriff Clarence Kackmeister successor by the asso-
dent.
Sheriff Robert W. Dugan of|
jalso gave up.
Barnes, with drunk driving Oct. 7 in a
warrant sworn to by Richard 0.
Inland Press
Barnes, commenting out of court,
‘said that if he was “guilty of anything,” it was “putting in ‘too
been searching for a fugitive, be-
came fatigued and stopped his car.
itured, but not before they had many hours.” He said he had
Caught Near Cyprus
NICOSIA, Cyprus (UPI)—A royal
naval patrol boat yesterday inter-
cepted a small vessel being used
by Turkish gunrunners to smuggle
arms and ammunition into Cyprus.
British officials said all three
men aboard the vessel were cap-
managed to scuttle their craft.
No Traffic With Devil
BERLIN (UPI) —Bishop Otto
Elects Officers Bloomington Publisher
Chosen to Head Group
of 475 Newspapers
CHICAGO (UPI) — Loring C.
Merwin, publisher of the Bloom-
ington
was elected prseident of the
land Daily Press Assn. (I.) Pantagraph, today
In-
Merwin succeeds John P. Harris,
publisher of the Hutchinson
(Kansas) News. Harris was
named chairman of the board of
directors,
Richard H. Bilacklidge, pub-
lisher of the Kokomo (Ind.)
Tribune, was elected vice presi-*
dent.
Named members of the board of |
directors for three-year terms were
— E. Moffitt, publisher of the
Fort Collings (Colo.) Coloradoan,
and Hnery J. Schmidt, editor and
publisher of the Aberdeen (S.D.)
American-News.
The association represents 475
newspaper in 20 states and Can-
ada. It is holding its annual meet-
ing this week in Chicago.
Syivia Porter, financial column-
: oD eee
tending the three-day meeting. Germany (UPI)— “a wD ae * . A series of brush fires swept
cote Pl me a3 sy 1960, will speak tomorrow. forest and heathland but causing
pa * * * .
People Lacking _ |tooe joined Gamer saat
FearofDeath sau." vee
Graham Says Aavetrioemeat lf You Are Under a0
You Are Not Too Old
For Life Insurance
Let. us tell CHICAGO (UPI) — Evangelist
how = can
More than 18,000 persons crowd-
ed in to the Coliseum and a near-
by cattle barn to hear the evangel-
ist describe the terrors of being
unprepared to die.
x *«
Graham saaid everyone dies but
few persons have made their
peace with God. Unless a man
accepts God and Jesus Christ, he
stated, he will go to Hel,
* * *
Graham is in the third week of
his month-long crusade, which is
scheduled to end Nov. 3. You handle the entire trans-
action by mail with OLD
AMERICAN of KANSAS CITY.
No obligation. No one will cal
on you
Tear out this ad and mail tt
today with your name, address
and year of birth to Old
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Oak, Dept. L1021A, Kansas
City, Missouri.
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) PONTIAC PRESS_
MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, =i 4
Drizzle Fizzles
Trial Racing —
at Drag Strip WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP —
Saturday's rain didn't quell the
fiery indignation of residents here
against plans to build a drag strip
at the Pontiac Speedway race track
on M59; but it did put a damper on
a trial run for their benefit.
* * *
The demonstration fizzled, be-
cause drag racers were prevented
by the rain from pushing their
cars to high speeds.
Residents in the immediate
area had been invited to the
track by Township Supervisor
Edward Cheyz as a probable so- track, it is possible that could have
broken an axle,’ said Cheyz.
“The members of the associa-
tion have put too much. money
into the cars to have them ruined
On a test run,” he added. = -
“It’s unfortunate that it rained,
but it did get the people protesting
the track out to see what takes
place at one of these races.
“I think those opposing the strip
are seeing it now in a different
light."’
“The people were very Coopera-
tive,” Cheyz concluded. “At least
we were talking and not arguing.” +e & PON'TIAC, MICHIGAN,
ae ee x . \from the cyclic changes that occur
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPI)—Mayor|so much im. farming,” Huff de-
Frank A. Sedita has found ‘an an- |clares.
swer to a problem fated by many |
cities with anti-littering campaigns Weft claims he and his as.
better chance you have ef pro-
tecting profits.”
tions caused by various elements.
In western ranching, Huff claims,
Jone drouth can drop prices so low
jit takes five years for the rancher
jto recoup.
HERE’S HOW IT’S DONE — R. B. Edgar, ohe
of 48 business executives serving as advisers to
16 Pontiac Junior Achievement
porations, shows two JA compa
} who works at the Pontiac plant bers a stock order form. Seen here with Edgar miniature cor-
ny board mem-__ High School
of General Mo- to each JA firm tors’ Fisher Body division are- Jerry Olague, 16, |uonwide attention in the early 3s. |
of 274 Ferry Ave.,
16, of 22 Rosshire Ct. Both attend Pontiac Central
The JA center is located at
East Pike St. Three adult advisers are assigned and Donna Timmerman, also
20'2
—
Orion Women
to Sponsor Sth
Treasure Show
LAKE ORION — The Lake Orion
{Women's Club will sponsor its
{fifth annual Hobby and Treasure
|Show from 11 a. m. to 10 p. m. to- State, Towns
| ‘Will Confer at Farming’ | Plans for the annual meeting of, John
mate point of consumption, the jnorrow at the First Methodist| | hip Officia
(Church house on East Flint strect.'Congressional districts embracing|liam Hayward * *« *&
‘and tea will be served
Only items to be offered for |
| sale are bulbs, dried weeds and
flowers.
General chairman is Mrs. G.|
\Dean Spitler,. assisted by Mrs
|James C. Isles
| Garden Club chairman is Mrs
Ivia J. Pelton assisted by Mis
Delbert Matthews
3Tots Killed
—rhow fo dispose of Cigarette ‘and
cigar butts for those. wh¢ smoke
outdoors.
* * -.,
After checking with the: sewer
authority, the mayor found there
was no obfection to using the city’s |Oakland and Wayne
pretected against market fluctua-| Lake Orion Garden Club. Cofiee | Farmington Township Treasurer|
|Elise Avery today
dis She is @irector of the 14th
trict of the Michigan Townships
| Assn.
The public dinner-meeting 1s
| scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Oct. 29
| at Botsford Inn, Farmington.
Purpose of the meeting is to
bring together those who make the
laws and those who carry them
out, explained Mrs. Avery.
Attending will be state congress-
men, senators, representatives and
officers, county officers and town-
ship officials.
* *
Among those invited, besides * : : counties!
He explains that profits thus are) Assisting will be members of the! have been completed, announced
Representing Wayne County will
{be Eugene Van Antwerp, chairman which
of the county board of supervi-
sors. Edgar M. Branigan county
clerk: Harold E. Stoll, county
treasurer; Andrew C. Baird. sher-
iff and Samuel Olsen, prosecuting
attorney, ,
* * *
Also among the guests will be
|Robert M. Montgomery, state di-
irector of elections, who will ex-
plain the new election laws. | plaintiffs claim they
lerty’’ by removing the\sand and/ unconstitutional.” re trying to|dinance under which the property
the prop-|is classified is ‘invalid, void wand
They further
gravel to level it to surrounding claim that, since there i, no valid
property grades (ordinance, they have a right to
* * * use the land for ravel mining
They also plan to create an arti- Tomnaiip Saber a sieve Skul
ficial lake on the property as a Said he had asked De Visscher to
4 ey se 3 appear before the township Zoning preliminary move to developing it y - Board to ask permission to remove as a residential building site, they . said | the sand and gravel
He added the Zoning Board “enhance the value
In anticipation of this develop. |
ment, Dean entered into two sub- |
contracts, one for $437,340 and | would “‘probably have approved"
the plan if it had been presented.
one for $150,093, with the U.S. In seeking court action on the
District Corps of Engineers to | matter, the plaintiffs allege the
provide sand and gravel for con- | land worthless in its present
struction work at Selfridge Air | state. They ask that they be al-
Force Base. lowed to continue operations and
. ‘that the township be restrained Large gravel mining equipment, ,_ _ _-'from prosecution of any criminal was moved onto the site Oct. cases in the matter until the case
and removal work was started. is decided
* * * Macomb County Circuit
Township officials immediately; James E. Spier has directed that
ordered the combine’s truck driv-| the Justice Court appearance of
ers to be ticketed and later sum-‘the truck drivers be adjourned un
monses were issued to the opera-) til the show cause issue is heard
tors for violation of the township; The hearing is set for Friday.
C.C. Gilliland’s Death
Revives ‘Fort’ Case LAPEER—With the death Satur-
day of Clayton C. Gilliland, mem
ories are revived of the famous
Lapeer Farmers Mutual Fire In- is
Judge
were them, and
I M) brought against
farmers seized Fi
years Gilliland, a one-time private
detective, led the fight were
against
S
on
companies the business of buy-
ing, feeding and selling cattle.
A summary of expert opinion
holds that the operation's success
only will be determined over a wpa ne xe we DY Stolen Car Children Bowled Over
| at Bus Stop, Residents
| Close In on Driver
storm-drain receivers as outdoor|period of the next two or three
ashtrays, | years,
GALLANT PAL — Mr. Moke the chimp, like a
plays Prince Charming to Terry
the rink. / UPI Photo
good skate,
Hoppe’s Cinderella at Hialeah,
Fila, The performing chimpanzee is lacing up the shoes of his four-
year-old roller-skating partner before joining her in a spin around COLUMBUS, Ohio «» — A stolen
car plowed into four children at a
schoo] bus stop in Columbus’ south
side today and killed three of them,
police reported.
Police said the victims were two
boys and a girl. All were dead on
arrival at Mercy Hospital.
* * *
ry Bellah, suffered a broken leg.
lah, was killed.
dy Kline, 7, and his brother Ray-
mond_ 5.
* * *
The 22-year-old driver, who was
not identified immediately, was
hurried to Central Police Station.
Police said they took him from
the scene quickly because angered
residents were closing in on him.
Kissing Parakeet
Can Be Dangerous
ST. PAUL (UPI)—A pet parakeet
may talk his way into your heart
but don't show your affection by
“kissing’’ him, warns the Minne-
sota Medical Association — you
could contact parrot fever.
Parrot fever, or psittacosis, pro-
duces symptoms resembling virus
pneumonia. It used to claim the
lives of 20 per cent of its human
victims, but antibiotics have re-
duced the death rate to less than
one per ecnt.
The fourth child, 5-year-old ser- Australians
Jerry's sister, 7-year-old Jane Bel- Getting Rich
The other two victims were Ran-|ON Kangaroos
| IVANHOE,
!Professional hunters are. making |several hundred township officials. |~
lare Congressmen Louis Rabaut,!
| John Lesinski, Martha Griffith and}
William Broomfield and State Sen-|
ators Patrick J. Doyle, Harvey L.|
| Lodge. Harold M. Ryan and Ray-
mond Dzendzel.
| Also, State Representatives Wil-
liam R. Copeland, Joseph 1. Jack-
ison, Lucille H. McCollough, Hiram
|McNeeley, Robert Waldron, Ches-
ter Wozniak, Alexander Petri, Har-
vey J. Beadle, Willtam H. Thorne,
|Lloyd L. Anderson, Arthur J. Law, |
Australia (UPI) —
good money these days shooting
kangaroos.
Kangaroo meat sells for only
fourpence (four cents) a pound for
dog food; it is not a popular table
delicacy here. But the skins sell
for up to 17 shillings (two dollars)
each—about 60 pence (56 cents) a
pound, compa with 45 pence (42
cents) a pound Mor wool. AD AGENCY EXPANDS—Co
proceeding on schedule. It is loca ing for MacManus, John & Adams, Inc., in Bloomfield Hills is surance Co. case which drew na- seizure
He was arrested at ‘Fort Zie Mr. Gilliland, 65, of 26 Church : Si, Highland Park, sutleved « genhardt,’ and later, all appeals
\stroke at his home Saturday. He exhausted, he was carried -
died in Highland Park Hospital piieem ae w stretcher: The) “tert was torn down, and the case dis- of a cerebral hemorrhage. = solved into a bitter memory for
| Gilliland headed a Lapeer | those who survived.
County farmers’ committee : NS > > or - ~ a] ] e whlch, rebelicd upuinel saad. ervice for Mr. Gilliland will be
held in’ Detroit tomorrow -with
burial in Grand Lawn Cemetery
Surviving are his wife, Ora; a
brother and a sister | ments levied against them.
| He came into prominence as the
|man who defended Chris and Paul
\Zeigenhardt, farmer brothers who
turned their property into a fort to
jresist eviction, and for the widowed
‘Mrs. Elizabeth Stevens whom evict-
ing officers carried bodily from her Carmichael Bus Line
Loses $600 in Theft ‘home.
Hitchock, Farrell FE. Rob * * *
all township officials in the four|erts, S. James Clarkson and Wil-| Gilliland was sentenced to prison) ROCHESTER — Thieves broke
in 1953 for a 4'2 to d+-year term for into the Carmichael Bus Line ga
Oakland County Officials invited COmspiracy to obstruct justice in rage early Saturday morning and
include Delos Hamlin, chairman of!the case of the late Mrs. Stevens. took $600 from the file safe
the county board of supervisors: le was released from prison last Rochester Police Chief Samuel
Charles A. Sparks. county treas- May. Howlett reported today.
urer, F. C. Ziem, prosecuting at-| Both the Zeigenhardts and The burglary was discovered by
torney and Frank Irons, county) Mrs. Stevens lost their cases and (the owner, Mrs. Nelda Carmichael,
sheriff. | were evicted. when she opened for business
about 7:30 am.
| The background of the story .
almost erupted into a small | investigating officers, Patrol-
lscale war, was the financial trouble} ™&" William) Woehl and Sgt.
of an insurance agency in which Robert Werth, found a side
Lapeer County farmers had in window broken. They said the
woeten thieves used a sharp instrument
| Under state law, the farmers! ' Pry open the safe.
lwere liable to assessments to} Missing was $400 in bills and
|cover losses of the firm, the Lapeer about $200 in small change. Mrs
Farmers Mutual Fire Lnsurance Carmichael said the break-in
\Co probably occurred sometime be-
tween 1:30 a.m., and the time she
made the discovery. | Some of the farmers refused to
‘pay. Court actions for judgments
nstruction of the new office build-
ted on West Long Lake road, just ters sometime in March.
west of Woodward avenue and across from the firm's main offices.
i —_——————
To Occupy New Building in March
But it’s not just a matter of
picking up a pea rifle and letting
fly. For a start, you must have
an army-type .303 caliber rifle;
nothing less will stop a ‘roo, and
even then the head must be the
target.
One- shooter in this town ‘‘just road and Woodward avenue here,
down the road” from Broken Hill| Will be occupied by MacManus,
— about 200 miles — said he was) ohn & Adams, Ine. upon its com-
making $225 a week from skins. He|Pletion next March, according to
could easily make more but he|~©. A. Jones, president of the na-
hasn't time to skin any more kan-|tional advertising agency. BLOOMFIELD HILLS — A new
two-story office building now under}
jconstruction at West Long Lake| MacManus, John, Adams Expands
ing, completed in 1952, was de- |space to display cars and othe
signed to provide for a 50 per |products (Pontiac and Cadillac are
two of the agency's clients). Pro cent expansion of staff, but be- | : ; j panne ovabeiewied «sect fins jvisions also are being made foi
after the agency occupied it in ine projection of movies, TV tapes,
1952," Jones sald. , {
i x * * Originally, the agency headquar- Parking space for 95 cars will be
ters contained 33,000 square feet of provided adjoining the building, ac-|
space. An additional 6,000 square) cording to the builders, Bloomfield!
feet was built three years ago, and/Center, Inc, Construction is by|
«ee *& across West Long Lake road from
the main offices of the firm, has| Asked whether shooting them :
Wait 19 Places to Wed |
Marriage-wait laws are in ettect|
in 19 states. i would ever make a sizable dent been designed to provide for the
in the kangaroo population one | more than 100 employes of the
rancher -replied: "G ‘ Lerd no, | agency presently occupying the
Thc idea is to drive ‘em onto the | nearby Gleaner Building.
next bloke's” place.” |
The agency's original build- the new building will provide an-|Charison Co. of Wyandotte.
other 30,000 square feet, for a total! The building will be occupied by
of approximately 70,000 ithe media, research, marketing,
Architectural design of the new! merchandising, accounting and
building will approximate that of roadside signs departments of
the main building, MJ&A according to present plans, |
The lobby will have gulficient Jones said.
/ Personnel now working in WJG&A
building on Woodward are expecte e e
af i) RM. *)@%
Shelby Firemen Take Case to Court * "Nine Protesting
Gravel Combine Petitions to Continue Work 0b, Pay Losses Seek Mandamus Writ
for Restoration of Their
Status
By LEE WINBORN
SHELBY TOWNSHIP —
The nine Shelby Township
firemen who were either re-
lieved of duty or received
pay cut last May have insti-
tuted court action to get
back their positions and lost
wages
They are asking Macomb
Cou nty Circuit Judge
James E. Spier to issue a
writ of mandamus ordering
the Township Board to re-
store their job status
In their bill of complaint against
the Township, the five
laid off charge thes
fully suspended
the
sued
The Township electorate
proved civil service for the fire-
men ig the Feb. 16 election, and
under the Civil Service Act em-
ployes must receive layoff
fices personalls and individually. who were
were “unlaw-
ind all nine claim
required notices were not
ap
no-
The firemen claim the only word
the the five who were laid off was
i notice on the department iul-
etin board
The four who were given dav
cuts first learned of it when they
received their pay checks after the
Township Board's April 23 budz-t
meeting in which both econoiay
moves were approved they sid.
The nine firemen appealed their
case to the Civil Service Commis-
sion which ruled that they be
imbursed for lost
tively to May 1 and that their ,
rate restored to what it 5
prior to that date wages ret (-
he
The ruling followed a duly °%
hearing.
Among the plaintiffs are
pended Fire Chief Clyde
whose case is the subject of seni-
rate proceedings and Acting Fire
Both re- Chef Marvin E. Meitz
ceived cuts in the economy mo
Defendants
township = supervisor
Evans, clerk, Jack Millard
urer, and William Peper. Ernst
Hagh, Jesse Bennett Sri and Flo.d
Parrott
The
Friday. are Steve
township trustes
hearing is set for 10
Brandon Grange Wins
in Community Service
ORTONVILLE — The Branden
Grange has been declared 1
Thumb District) winner if
National Grange - Sears Roebue
Foundation annual community
service contest
The Grange will receive ao $20
US) Savings Bond at the 86th an-
nual session of the State Grang
being held Wednesday threuza
Saturday in Saginaw
The major event for the Brandon
Grange in the contest year ending
Aug. 21 was its annual commun
fair held last fall
f fices nearby Gleaner in. the of
d to be moved into the new quar-
Birmingham Firm
fo Design School
ROCHESTER — The
Bourd of Education has hired the
Birmingham firm of O'Dell, Hew-
lett and Luckenbach to design an
elementary school,
The building will be located
on a 1@acre site at the west
end of town recently donated to
the school system by Howard L.
McGregor and Howard L. Mc-
Gregor dr. Rochester
The Board is considering invit-
ing citizens to help formulate plans
for the school. An additional group
of faculty members and residents
has been proposed to work on the
junior high expansion program, Schmit
Sku! i
Lorin Fk,
tress
Probably Will Start. Uproar
Book on FDR Is Critical By LYLE C. WILSON
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The
Henry Regnery Co. of Chicago
has published a book with a
provocative title which is like-
ly to stir up some angry dis-
pute in the United States.
The title is: “Roosevelt's Road
to Russia." The author is George
N. Crocker. The price per copy
is $5. That is a high price for a
book of 312 pages, and it may
discourage some readers.
x *
More discouraging to readers
could be a trend in book review-
ing which the right-wingers of
American politics declare they
can discern and identify. This
is a trend toward shrugging off
as bad manners, or worse, those
books and pamphiets in circu-
lation which fiercely challenge
Franklin D. Roosewelt’s 1933-5
stewardship of the American des- |-
Crocker's
bluntly worded challenge. It will
be all the more offensive to
FDR's defenders
condition now prevailing, which
is a mess. The theme of Crock- |
er's book is that FDR was a |
gullible stooge for J. V. Stalin's |
master plan to dominate the |
post war world or as much of |
it as possible.
ABOUT CONFERENCES
‘Roosevelt's Road to Russia’ |
is a chronicle of the men around
FDR and of the great wartime |
conferences at which these men |
and the President matched wits |
and wisdom with the Allied |
teams and notably with Stalin
and V. M. Molotov. Crocker
documents his charge that the
U.S. team was overmatched and |
outplayed. He especially tags
the late Harry Hopkins as a |
safety man who forever was
dropping the ball for lack of the
will to catch it.
“That a web of subversion was
spun over Washington in Roose- :
velt’s administration is now be-
yond question,” Crocker writes. |
® * *
“J. Edgar Hoover's ‘Masters |
of Deceit’ is but one of many
authoritative sources which ver-
ify that the government was in-
filtrated by both Communist
sympathizers and Soviet agents
and that U.S. policies, plans and
official attitudes were not only
influenced by these infiltrations |
but also promptly reported to
Moscow.
BITTER COMPLAINT
“It Franklin D, Roosevelt be- '
came, as war went on, Stalin's
favorite fellow-traveller, it was |
because any | not necessarily
ideological conversion occurred.
‘The pro-Russian atmosphere
in Washington .
to many, including book is a fierce |
because it |
challenges their hero as the ar- |
chitect of World War Il strate- |
gies which left the world in the |
. was galling |
the frus- |
trated Secretary of Navy, James |
Best Year Predicted
by Ex-Ike Adviser
BOSTON (UPI) — The nation
will have its best economic year
in history next year, former
White House economic adviser
Dr. Gabriel Hauge predicted.
Hauge, now chairman of the
finance committee of the Manu-
facturers Trust Co., New York
City, also said personal incomes
will continue te grow in 1960. He |
said his predictions were based
on the assumption that the na-
tienwide steel strike would no
longer be a factor in the econ- |
amy by then.
He told the 19th New England
Bank Management Conference
that inflation does not appear to
be a problem for the immediate
future, but he warned that infla-
tionary trends must be watched
carefully.
Order Pad Probably
Saves Driver's Life
NEW YORK (UPI) — A Brook-
lyn truck driver probably owes
his life today to an order pad he
carries in his shirt pocket.
Charles Hager,
tried to rob him. When he at-
tempted to shake them off, he
said, one fired right at his heart.
The bullet hit the order pad and
was deflected. The thugs fled.
Paul de Kruif Weds
riage of Paul de Kruif, a roving |
editor for Reader's Digest and
noted writer on medical topics, to}
Fleanor Lappage, of Birmingham,
Ala., has been disclosed. It was |B"
the second marriage for De Kruif,
about 69, whose first wife died.)
He lives outside Holland at a se- 23, told a al V. Forrestal. His diaries reveal
that in September, 1944, he had
written to a friend that ‘if any
American suggests that we act
in accord with our own interests,
he is apt to be called a...
Fascist or imperialist, while if
Uncle Joe (Stalin) suggests
that he needs the Baltic prov-
inces, half of Poland, all of Bess-
arabia and access to the Medi-
terranean, all hands in Washing-
| ton agree that he is a fine, frank,
| candid and generally delightful
; fellow.’ Such was the frame of
mind Roosevelt took to Yalta.”
x * *
Road to Russia’’ says: ‘Many |
people will be made angry by
this book.”
That is a sound and reasonable
prediction, especially if the ques-
tions raised by Crocker become
involved in next year's Presi-
dential campaign. The dust cover of ‘Roosevelt's |
|
STOP ON SIGNAL—Some 1,271
persons were killed at railroad-
highway crossings last year,
reports the Interstate Commerce
Commission. There were a total
of 3,099 accidents, involving
pedestrians as -well as motor
vehicles and trains. The figure
was below that for 1957 (see
chart)
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Green Peas Top Frost Frozen Sliced
Strawberries
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Sunday 9 to 6 P.M
59 S. SAGINAW
Mon., Fri., Sot. to 6 P.M. Sundey 9 to 6 P.M. 700 PONTIAC TRAIL
WALLED LAKE
- Open 9 to 9 Daily
Sunday 9 to 6 P.M.
398 AUBURN . Thurs., Fri,, Sat. to 9 P.M. Sunday 9 to 6 P.M. 6592 TELEGRAPH _at MAPLE
‘Mon., Tues., Wed. to 6
urs., Fri., Set. to 9 P.M.
ander 9.00 te 6 P.M.
536 N. PERRY
“Thurs., Fri., Set Sunday 9 fo Set. to 9 P.M.
6 P.M NORTH HILL
SHOPPING PLAZA ROCHESTER |
Failure of Talks
Plunges Steels . ae tr 2, ae i i, i ae, ee a ie ee
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER. 19,
¢ it it jee eel "Ea Vg
1959
2
| MARKETS Grain Futures
=| Mostly Weak
Waterford Twp.
to Check Laws Boord Will Consider
Streamlining Them at
Meeting Tonight
Scheduled for tonight’s Water-
ford Township Board meeting will
Dow-Corning
Plans New Pad
_to
operation by next summer and
would produce the world’s purest
silicons under a license from West-
inghouse Corp.
The silicons will be used as crys-
to the Farmer’ - be recommendations for revisions fi by growers and sold by . deataaes shin Grd tals for transistors and rectifiers,
NEW YORK @~ Steels fell me Sane Cee cc AGO WH —‘Graip futures\. lrg sila Dow-Corning mow makes semi- hersiet ‘tha ‘tat’ olaat eet de.| eamtatiuns are furnished by the , S\according to Clerk James Seet- pure silicons at its plants here.
clined early today because of dis- ireau of me, an of y - ed deai-|erlin. Dr. Collings said the new plant,
i y te-eaitle Friday. ings on the Board of Trade today. | Due to the sharp increase and with 30,000 square feet of floor
ppointment over failure < * “ anticipated growth of the town- space, would employ 40 to 50 per- the steel strike. Trading was ac p Soybeans, the most important ship, the Board has been reviewing sons in initial operations.
tive, juce and prepari sid lana os Leading issues dropped from commodity on the board in recent a preparing more. igi ang Charter. No. 3138—Reserve District } No.7
tive eRurts weeks, started lower, continuing a/P/anning regulations for new de- REPORT. OF CONDITION OF THE
es * t é Mya. cee} gs\downturn = that commenced _last| Yelpers. Community issues dropped from) 4 eRe So csosser noone ee pees a for) Aetion will be considered on National Bank eter eetoeee |
fractions to about 3 points A bu. .. + 3.50 ¢ mproved, | raising the cost for supervision
r of Pontiac in the State of Michigan. at Rails, motors and chemicals also/‘! 00, Reports of large weekend | °f township street lighting instal- the close of business on October 4. 1939,
3 r » 58 4 )
took sizable losses, o 3 marketings of beans in the coun- tations ra UR base counperene: “ot the currency, ader Bec-
The whole market was down as 4 try brought increased selling of | Edison Co. This reportedly tion 5211, U. 8. ease Savas.
hopes were dashed over the Gilne. DU... csevssssseeeecs sees 2. | Doam futures. The trade also | “ould bring it to rates charged Cash, balance \with other
weekend that the steclworkers |“*rmelon. bu. ....-.-...++++ . 200) reacted to a report that the bean | by other communities. balan ca entig Sass woulg bé on their way back to feored Wen harvest in Illinois now is 50 to 70 | 4 recommendation of the Elec- | brocese, of collecti@h 18.078 440 52 00) per cen > : Un work this . —-* peseses ae t complete. Itrical Board requiri that . all obligations, direct and > é hoes ae . e ies SP é uaranteed 34,015.572.08 Big blocks of the leading steel| cabbage ew - . | Elevator and export houses were commercial buildings be wired to En lOblieations of States and makers were traded at drastically|* bbage, we } 98 sellers of corn in early transac-|@ “main conduit line will be dis- —_ * Sa | seatttion!_eebaivisions a 21,023,608 57
ker| Ca 1.16\tions, although prices held within|cussed. There also will be a re- debentures... ......... 246,843 53 marked-down prices. The tic c 2.00 = = »xI t Corporste stocks tinelud-
tape was late briefly at the open-|Carrots, oro ve : \@ narrow range. Corn receipts at} quest to repeal a speed exhibition | ing $174,000.00 stock of ing in the rush to unload jwer, dos ee . 938| Chicago today were 37] cars. lordinance because the adoption of Federal Reserve bank: 174.000 fa
x * * , ry. Gon stxa.” oon. z it * * * ja regulation now in operation will cee iLiecen oven . reot, dos. 2.00) , P » stres init arti bone $4,371,857 46
ee Eeeplant tang’ t vk. eI Wheat started easy on scattered | P¢ pects the mince nS actin: Bank premise 661,082 13 i se selling . i ications egula- , ae . 1.661, also by Jones & Laughlin and Lu-/Eegplant, Long, ivpe, OG 1 peseteeraang house selling of the) ven a ee seta es WATERFORD BEAUTY — There's a queen a 20-year-old Waterford Township beauty. A | ¢2Ndure ana kens while Youngst a Seal Horseradish, pk ‘1.4100 cmoee et AY Cet eries eee ee ee ee Et ae just about everything so why not a ‘Miss Car beauty school instructor, Miss Atkins poses pret- | p/2xt¥res a ees about 4 Kohirab' doz bdchs. **"Ys0 There was Scattered buying of the!which affect fire hydrant, tank| Wash of 1960?” The Automatic Car Wash Assn ne i sien ae s Real estate Battal other eaten es ks, . behs. 1.75 March wheat. Volume was small. {piping and pump house installa- . : é asn Assn. y ona it ontiac; suggesting a new style in Gtiieil wacers nee 721.706. 27 iT | a . .
aene cn eae geet eee foe a “err =! tions, along with fina] overall in-! thought it was a good idea and apparently it was, hood ornaments. SPE Ferd, Chrysler, New York Cen- + ee mee ary aoe 12%, Kye demonstrated most ‘cnaettee rules. also will be con.| sce the winner was shapely Marjome Atkins Total Assets ki rane 185.714 73
tral and Baltimore & Ohio. Sa oe = = Ap strength, with prices moving sidered , aaa - —- Demand deposits of individ-
snips. Cello Pak dez. | 2.25) higher on good demand. uals, partnerships and ' Losses of about 2 were shown by! Parsnips. ‘% bu * 200 a corporations $41,033 149.44
150 Time deposits of individ- Du Pont Goodyear, Texas Instru- Peppers, ——— pk eee Near the end of the first hour p) th F| h y als, partnerships an , s hot, bu... eee 1.75 . ‘ . als, part P .
ments and Zenith. pepepra: Grew ber iestociit ao'lDeeemaher tl eter eee te ee Comic Writes Cains CISEWNETE = Waterford Area Folks Angry pen aia adie Pa * * »p BWC, BU. ..ccccce score 1 25 “ember 7 ly; corn J lower, ; . . Government «including
Among 1-point losers were Amer- Pumpin, be = seliscesesee 1.10, December $1.084s; oats 14 higher Judge; They BEREA, Ky. (AP) — John pea! ase) cad ps: 1529.71667
ic Radishes, black. % bu. ........-... 1 % | . - 7 - Gay, the only mayor this town “i O S ee O ice its iticel eubdiviaion: 15 360.653 85 ican Motors, Raytheon, Kennecott,|padishes. red. doz bu. .. |... 3.25 |'0 's lower, December 74; rye un- mes al sit pet ia ear er
American Cyanamid, Thiokol and/Redishes, white, doz. ...... - 12S 'changed to 14 higher. December Correspond 3.300 pie bad until he reured in Other deposits tcertified ee eee OAS OE Sc csecs aus cece cess . 4 8, die nday in a Lexington hiers check Westinghouse Electric Squash, Acorn be ; ise $1.3478; and soyebans 4, to 55 low- —— _ end cashi aon
ot Buttercu * 1-58 er, Novembér $2.12! ° HAMILTON. Ohio (UPI) The hospital. He was $4. Vandalism in) Waterford Town-'the back window shattered. he told a 2 1.323.703.80 Squash. Butterm : 5 allel: Al N, = . < sat einie , eo _ . otal san _ : * * * hip yesterday kept police busy as police. Deposits $99,206 221 92 New York Stocks oe sara sane <3 Rcabande ss ats — judge who sentenced a former CHICAGO (AP)—Irving S. Flor- Complaints poured eo hon eae a principal of the Monteith Other liabilities 1 682 442 60
NEW YORK, Oct. 19 (AP)—PiguresiTomatoes, 14 ID. ..........0.-ceeee desperado to 20 years in prison! hag ; 8 _ residents all over the Sch Mr > 17 . tel 1 littes £100 888 664 FL after decimals are eighths. / jTurnips. doz. bdchs ; ross Ne Otiators has received a letter from him sheim, 65, chairman of the board Pesiae all over the area, School, Mrs L earl Turo. reported; Total ute encoun. 56
Admiral 5 Jones & os ™ = g ae k a , forilhi oneider of Florsheim Shoe Co., died Sun * * * a Window in the back of the school Capital Stock
Air Reduc 61.4 Kelsey May 48.2 GREENS a = —oE—_ day after a long illness. He was a Boys heaved rocks through a $390, had been cut out but nothing was} Co™ me es $2,900 000 00 2 800 000.00 Allied Ch 120 = Kennecott - 2 2 canvage No 1. ow 81 60 ation a 4 La 1. ldisturbed par 2 popes
Allied Strs ... $74 Kimb Clk ,,. 62/7 He eye paseneennnneens i + re ee in 0 a ~ . = former president of the rm, plate glass window at 6 p.m. at the:Gl 2.9°0.000.00
Allis Chel ... 374 , 5 31.7/Collard, No. 1. bu. ...... : Butler County Common Pleas : candied by hh ther. Carl Ovar . 378 LeBaeot _ _ vided profit 726.791 42 lum "Ltd “e a * 67.6 Kole. a eocecssccccees 1 50 : . Bre : —— _- which was founded by his lithe: ar! Ogans home, o18 LeBavon === : a retiremes
Aiea 103.3 Lib MeNa&L'.. 10.7'Musterd. No. 1, bu vec teeees 1.25} Court Judge Fred B. Cramer was * * * St ‘ounts for preferre Am Airlip .... 25.7 Lieg & My to) bu terseeeseereccsecceccoe 1.18 DETROIT w — First negotia- surpri sed to hear from Frank = : ’ : ét¢ \ 370258 70
Spinach, bu seeeeies eee: NEWPORT, R. I. tAP)—Archi- -. : 2 red Gyan . Ma poo _— ze 30 2 /Swias Cherd WO. oi cccecoscovsccsvee ee tions in the 76-day-old United Auto Lawrence Sprenz “the flying bald Davidson Williams. 73. a re Herbert Buchanan of 6311 Elm. rews | Or Toreiecapiislina ~ 6 897.05 012
Am MaFdy .. 96 Lone 8 Cem.. 31.7/Turnips. bu : ae |Workers strike against Cross Co./bank robber’) who was on the ae Sg) 6 MOOd Dr., reported five boys in SS Am Met 25.1 Lone 8 - 96 ; tired executive of U S_ Steel ; . ae ’ Tota Lia es oar Am Motors 636 Lorillerd ..,. 432 SLAM GREENS were on tap here today FBI's list of 10 Most Wanted Men Cc : sae a car stepped in front of his Capllsleaceou $107 785.714 73 — . { b orp., died Sunday Willams re a . . ; - Am Bmet 130.4 Martin So ; a ‘ aeatre — oon a Beeeal 5 73) Representatives of the Macomb until his capture in Mexico last tired in 1949 after 45 years with gh El bls ey Dou 0 ree INers Am Tel & Tel 78.5 Mead +++ 47.4) Bsearoie. bu. . gy 18 County automation machinery firm April 14. vis < A bricks at his house, then drove a -
Am Tob 103 _ Merck 33.2) Lettuce. Bidd ok ait the firm TONOPAI UPL —Rescue Serunes iat
Anscends ee ts as | Lettuce. leat. : 250 o\and UAW Local 155 were called Sprenz said he would like to * * * ant. . \ probe a : ut , for other purpo 298! 562 80
Armes oo 1s Monsan Cu ts =_— * 728/together by federal and state medi- i, 4 ith th BUFFALO, N.Y AP) TI They returned, threw) m Ses ones ite tae ee ae a ieductions of Armco 8t) 4.6 . > _* start a correspondence w e 3 AL ( he au eturt hres nore coral . ra re after deductior Mont Ward 502 | = “e “ : " . several areas today searching fo reserves ¢ . 42
Arecwr & Oe #) Mot Prod 58 aves Mt offices of the State Labor udge from “this jonely island’ |Rev Dr. Robert T.. Bapst. 79, re- stones, but sped away before pu- a: ‘ meeritia : ease st —_ 2 Mot ents | Mediation Board oe hd oe three men trapped by a cave-in . Aveo Corp 134 Moeterels “108 2 Pou try and Eqgs : of Alcatraz. tired 3uffalo superintendent of lice arrived, he told police. fay dave ton ap At - Eneus ala a a r deductior sé anaes
Balt & Oh “43 38.3) | The meeting was the first b: é , > ory: aly ft ee) fost “pairs te Beth Btee! 140.2 — Cp. &3 | DETROIT POULTRY h il 1 133 “Perhap fe we could joe hools, who became a Roman * * * Nii srr 1 W A. Taylor, vice president and
Boeing Air ... 31.2 = a} T JLT |tween the company and Local 155 ped) WU a fhe Bt «Catholic priest at 71. died Sunday ho sont SPA vidas} “oland —~ Acbier of the” ahove-nanied bank ee Bond Strs .... 217 = cosh as = | DETROIT ‘AP\—Prices per pound since prior to the start of the get the robbery incident, and be ( rolic ¥ ’ : ne ain a Shor tly after inidnig we Cleland . * * * oer sweat that the shave eae Borden 2 mat Oype sta! oe Detrott for No. 1 quality live ike, & P just plain people,” the dapper 1> had been with the Buffalo pub-'Chiarponean. 109 S. Jose phine st The missing miners comprised at te of my knowl Borg arn... sees | poultry strike, ug é i é . ; : ; . = , : L ime m4 Ls yn Vise edg id belief .
Briggs Mfg 10.4 NY Comma a |. Heavy type hens 17-18; light type hens! Cross a reed to meet after a)\29-year-old bandit wrote lic school system for 47 years vent to his car parked near Scho l- the overnight crew at the old-time bata Pied t oe Brist My 39.5 Nort & West . 04.4% heavy ty broilers and fryers %-4 8 : La ia when he left in 1949 to enter a... ft School on Maceday qi Hl ie - : oe Vice president & Cashier
Brun Bale . ---108_ oe am AV 37.2\!bs. whites 18-19; Barred Rocks 21-22, federal court finding Oct. 9 that} Sprenz, who once attended col- ; cralt s¢ ( ‘ ay al an IN producer, which was opened Correct Attest
Budd Co ..... 26.7 caponettes over 5 Ibs. 25-26 . seminary. He was ordained in found both front headlights on rr “ ~ A C GIRARD
Burroughs ... 30.1 — } ed rw. $33 |rejected a company appeal from a lege in his native Akron. Oho 195} ou oo 4 meets Only (WoO weeks ago LOUIS H COLE
ok tH Ohie O1 3 DETROIT pernor EGGS jruling of the National Labor Rela-|thanked Cramer for showing| ~ a «= @& smashed, the hood dashes ” mv They were anes Bolen HOWARD W. HUTTEN! OCHER
"" So Owens : ETR (AP)— 3 fob. Detroit ,; ; } . ‘ cae P | side damaged, aerial bent over “in¢ . sy : , pareolat ; ; “Ount a Gomee Soup. a. Owens I! bi ‘ ae im case lots Noord ap . graded: rot tions Board (NLRB) that Local 155 some intere st in him and said LOS ANGELES (AP) — Pemo : 33, Mina; Samuel] Sickles, 45, ae { Michigan. County of Oak
Can Pac 33 334 Pac 8 Whites—Grade A extra large 39: large represented a majority of the some! ‘‘This is a lonely island, espe- , 7 ' Tonopah, and Willi: Del . Sworn to and stbscribed before me Capital Airt’. 18 PSP AW Alr .. 24 [37> medium 26; small 22: grade B large Fitzsimmons, 76, widow of Bob pah, iam Delorme, yer oe Go bed
Carrier Cp. 37 — a - £7 (24 Drowns—Orade A extra large 400 production workers cially without an occasional letter pi inmons. died Friday of a Redding, Calif. i nas chal T aur met on atttcer 20. ++ 2) large 37; medium 25; li 2 hecks 1 = n omeone , - experiences ~~ . Ae rere lewic af ss oe Trae’: rw Parke me. Se #3 Tetal | waskty receipts of gt a ° from someone Your experience stroke She was born in Russia The cave-in was discovered Eri 1 director of thi Sea Mcoraw
Ches & Oh -o3 att oie te tag ess Oct. 10-16, were 11.207 "T F Te with people would be interesting Her husband, who won the world e ras an lay when the day shift i : "Notary Pubite Chrysler cose . cases F “tive P 5 . . VELRs Lis re day shi arrived to My commissi x es N Cities sve ee Sepet Cole 8 Commercially traded royer aces erm jand instructive. so a etter rnd Aaa ek, light heavyweight relieve the men, who were working 19% ommission expires November 20,
Soca Cola .,.. 26 s—Orade xtra } - v« j > ow “ons or. King ;
: 04 —" : <3 large 34-35: medium *D- Ar cee t 18 4 would ve welcomed consider and heavyweight titles, died in . it the. 500-foot level. Since that acca = sees 3) “i grade B large 28: browns—grade A extra ably 917 ; ' , 63.1 Phill Pet _....431 \large 34, large 32'3-34; medium 22' of Fifteen Years . ; 41 tin experienced miners have * 5@ oct & G ... 82 | small 17. a - od Cramer indicated he would com- ee ae eee 57.2 re : =) ly with the convicts request WOrKE in relays both manually 65— 466 sees ply i convict S request. und with power equipment -
13.1 : ts s MOUNT CLEMENS uP — Joseph 2 Men Hurt When Car oe xe Juipment to reach - 10.2 - a a Alf \f | the trapped men
af rt al re sae Overturns Near Orion Dehydrating Alfalfa Is a", LUCKY FOR YOU : ‘ * we | rison term of 15 years in the|Vice Admiral Hanson verturns ‘ : $1.4 a eW ennies P ‘ . Stinker of a Job, but Jim White, a spoke fort "7 - HS he P | . oe a in r am 1 a spokesman for the a waned riageloe! a oe he oat Dies Suddenly i in West | Romer Estep, 40, and Frank Fe Mighty Profitable U.S. Milling and Mining Co.. said
-- Be hou Aamend 0 he said rell, 46, both of 151 Collier Rd..| 1 \ Porine thw . 2.1 ° = : Ne . . , . ° sterday rere was still hone the * $33 at refused him an apartment because) SAN DIEGO. Calif. uw — Vice Pontiac Township. were injured a were alive and well. if they
‘ 38 he had children Adm. Edward W. Hanson. 70. who!whén their auto ran off Baldwin) . A ey nh Rad arising af ihe a -a $2.6 . COZAD. Neb. tUPI Mhesx re Nad warning of the disaste) * 2 = Bae Troyer has been convicted of commanded the cruiser Indianap-|road and overturned at about 6:30 - k Fy Ae = —_ -
: 183 72.4 S T ‘o’ Is | - | {manslaughter in the death last;plis in the, Pacific in the early Sundav evening, according to Oak- '€4!') making hay these day il
: ip 1 | ma © Is intentiona »|March 15 of Mrs. Mary Douglas.'days of World War II and later land County sheriff's deputies ce ntral Nebraska ‘ News in Brief
F eh Says Mint Official; Used 85 headed a cruiser division, died! They were treated at Pontiac; Dehydrated hay, that
: aH Lazt| . . Police said Troyer admitted) suddenly Sunday General Hospital and released} Taking most of the water content ; .
24.6 oS ss + $1.8) to Break Uniformity striking Mrs. Douglas in anger.| He collapsed on a_ sidewalk. Estep told deputies he couldn't out of alfalfa grown in Wusi fields aide meller: of 39 Auhurs Rd.,
$6.2 Stud Pack 1.) 194, | He pleaded temporary insanity. Hie Cause of death has not been de- negotiate a curve at Indianwood o¢ the Platte River Valles is a Heights, rerorted to Oak-
ee. mi $3.4 , : I 1 is to be sentenced Oct. 30 termined ‘oad in Orion Township hema ” “ Jand County sheriff's denuties Sun-
! 103.3 Seif & Co: Ff ‘| WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sav-, enn : : sialannaiiie hos _ sie : __|big business, a business thats get- q,,, that someone stole his 12-foot Gen fils. 3. 43 Tenn Ges... 31 ling new pennies because you ling bigger Wery yeat metal rowboat from) behind his G Tel & El . 71.3 Texaco ...,.. ui eis eho ehi r pany eS 6Tex © Bul. ia.1 heard they are going to be re- | The thousands of tou 0 home. It is valued at $73 Gen Tire | Textron pics’ 4.1) called by the government? Think jannually drive along U.S. High-
Giilete $4 Tat w as Ba you're going to make a lot of way 30, particularly in Dawson Goebe] Br 2.6 Transamer 31.6 ce ee Sally Stube, 1010 Argyle Ave., | poe ** 6 Teeet 32.6/Money in rare coins? iCounty from Lexington through reported to Pont } } aid i ? ( ac whic 1
ee hy meer ‘s344| You have been misled jCozad and Gothenburg. can't miss Sane 2 ’ . i ; ice that ue . : Ie sameone broke into her home over
OF ARP... 3 - 3 | When the new issue of new U. jit. o Ry ... . 41.7 Ss. ; the weekend and stole a watch Lots of people are hguring that age ory V7 tt a pennies came out in Febuary, a The “dehy” plants — trucks: valyed at $125 and her wallet con-! 65 will be lucky tor them. No more
Holland F par: itt : 304 ee cee eeee tie te streaming up to them, green toning $52 regular duties. time to relax. traved
Homest vee a8 Bg ¢|Rovernment was gonig to recall dust spouting from the stocks, and do a hundred other things. i ae al meant 3 BR githe copper coins because ahs huge storage elevators and Someone stole 30 radiators fron And with enough moneys to de
Ing Rand .... $3, Ba |body goofed and put a small ‘‘o” strings of hopper cars being yh. Pontiac Waste. Material vard them. How / First. they have Soeab jasolr Cys 3.7 3a4\in “United States of America” on! | loaded — are easy to spot. W105 Branch St. it was reported S@cunts Second they have aneasy, Int Bus Mch .414 32] { ran i" : . 1 Int Kary : iat 5.61 ee coin's tail-side. And thev're even easier t to Pont police over the week sensth 1 plan of saving inal ue
| Oh 1 all 1 rf \ears P~ the ees rot for. Int Paper 128.6 #3 é| Actually, mint artist Frank Phe odor of the dehydrat et LORS EN ee 1ROI fe ' their S << : , fi 63 Int all a w $23 Gaspare of Philadelphia deliber- plants has a character all its own. dunked cars. were valued at about ' "| . i ta' L 1 et \ Jolt 5
ja Oe Doe Fag Sh&T 19, ately used the small “‘o” to break It smells something like a pile of $1: ‘a aving . a leo gees : ¥ ia~ iode fi Johns Man .. 50.2 up the uniformity ef the letter- sun-decayed lawn clippings. mixed artctn een ae " ‘in A >
ing , with burnt toast. Some folks like Doris L.. Harmon, 104 Augusta would lot ce Gil cae 3018 1560 = j ; : . , ; : : : you would guess. Let me tell you Indust Rails Util Stocks : ; it. Others say it makes ‘em sick. St., reported to Pontiac police that’ about 11 : Prev. day .,....335.7 137.3 © 2249; The Assistant director of the | ci. ] wenterarcime, Bindie fe ‘about 1
Week ago ..,...332.9 135.1 97.0 223.1 i Le . someone stole a bundle of clothing Sagat 3915 127 314.7| mint, land Howard, said ru- ; ge
sori l ad Poa 9 eS ue Last year, America’s processing Valued at) Slo while she was Year seep 293.9 125.0 859 198.6) mors start “every time we put out = : of é F Ing
bof = il . -ooe SRG ins ieee are a new coin.” centers turned out slightly more shopping “ iw eeeegre bg « od . . .
1958 high ..,..+-312.0 136.5 95.7 214.3 k« *« jthan one million tons of dehydrat
1988 low ...°...-394.7 (80.9 72.9 156.6 “ ] : : ed alfalfa pellets — green pellets Mrs. Thomas Serbinoff, 27 Mo- People look at it closely, find : ; Vee fie 7 Sani 1080 W. something they never noticed be ithe diameter of a thick pencil and hawk Rd, reported to Pontiac
; y , ° jvarying in length from one quarter police that someone stole her Huron AWOL Dog Returns fore and hope it'll turn into some- I
9 thing rare."’ ito a full inch. purse containing $105 while she Street
, TOPS NATION was shopping Saturday FE 2-0219 After Bolting Crate
ST. LOUIS uw — Army Pvt. and}
Mrs. Alva Fincham Jr. drove 500
miles, searched several days for
their pet dog which was AWOL,
then drove back to Ft. Riley, Kan.,
discouraged.
But the Humane Society didn’t
give up. It continued running a
newspaper advertisement.
A week later, the dog, named
Johnny, was found and shipped tc
the Finchams. It had bolted from
a shipping crate at the St. Louis
Union Station.
Death Takes Widow
of Booth Newsman
LANSING @ — Louis Jenkins,
bh pinlath ne ier any state capi-
tol the Booth
Hospital. Jenkins died two years Howard said Gasparo worked
for weeks on an eight-inch clay-
model of the coin, which, for a
change has the Lincoln Memorial
etched on its back instead of just
“ONE CENT”.
He said that it was rather fl-
logical that one of the 41 letters,
which appear on the penny,
would escape Gasparo’s notice on
a model that large.
An examination of the coin
shows that the small ‘‘o” is the
only letter of the 41 that is not
capitalized. This fact makes the
little letter more noticeable.
But Howard said, “it’s no mis-
take and we're not going to re-
call the coin.
* * *
The smal] ‘‘o” in the “‘of” on
the new penny doesn’t stand
alone among the “‘of's’” which
appear on U.S. coins, Small “‘o’s’’
appear on the 1921 “Peace Dol-
lar,” the 1916 half-dollar and ‘the
current Franklin halt. dollar, years old just like the rest of the
she’s
ago last May. =
her ability to study however as
| Howard pointed out, LIVIN’ DOLL — Sharon Kay Burnett is six
first grade at Arcadia Park, Tex.,
y 34 inche$ tall. This does not handicap *
ea
AP Wirephoto
up with the others. Sharon weighed only three
pounds, five ounces at birth, but has never been
sick a day since she was taken out of the incu-
bator. students in the
school. But
she keeps right | Nebraska topped the nation with
a production of about 300,000 tons.
Ohio was next, with Kansas right
along in the running.
The process of fire-drying alfal-
fa so its nutritional values would
|be preserved longer was started at
|Leland, Miss., not long after World
War I.
In the early 1920's the pioneer
plant was moved to the Kaw
River Valley of Kansas. Word of
its success spread north and Ne- |
|
| |
braska’s first plant was con.
structed near Elm Creek, 35
miles east of Cozad, in the mid-
1920's.
Nebraska now has slightly undet
|100 plants — most of them in this
jarea.
The industry was started not
only as a means of improving
winter feed for livestock but as a
jway of leveling off the alfalfa
market and finding a summer-
time use for natural gas brought
through pipelines in huge quanti-;
ties to combat Nebraska's severe
winter cold Wanted: Sleeping quarters for 4
deer hunters on Nov. 14th, Lewis-
ton, Mich. or immediate area. Con-
tact Bernie Salvatore. FE 2-8181,
Ext. 36—or eves LI 9-1274. Adv THE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
OF VIRGINIA Rummage Sale, Redeemer Luth-
eran Church, 1800 W. Maple, Birm
ingham. Oct. 22, 8 a. m. to 6 p. m.; letra cetaceans
Oct. 23. 9 a.m. to 2 p. m. Adv - —— Ee _
COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE
For
Less Money
No
Membership Fees
Terms
DANIELS AGENCY 563 West Huron Street FE 3-7111
M. E. Daniels Vera M. Daniels